An Inventory of Archaic and Classical Poleis (Hardback)
$438.31 - Save $22.82 (4%) - RRP $461.13 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 48 hours | |Short Description for An Inventory of Archaic and Classical Poleis This is the first lexicon of all identifiable Greek city states of the Archaic and Classical periods (c.650-325 BC). It contains descriptions of 1,035 of the city states, organized region by region.
Full description- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Published: 27 January 2005
- Format: Hardback 1416 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Linguistics | Urban Communities | European History | Ancient History: To C 500 CE | Classical History / Classical Civilisation | Classical Greek & Roman Archaeology
- ISBN 13: 9780198140993 ISBN 10: 0198140991
- Sales rank: 838,177
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Full description for An Inventory of Archaic and Classical Poleis
This is the first ever documented study of the 1,035 identifiable Greek city states (poleis) of the Archaic and Classical periods (c.650-325 BC). Previous studies of the Greek polis have focused on Athens and Sparta, and the result has been a view of Greek society dominated by Sophokles', Plato's, and Demosthenes' view of what the polis was. This study includes descriptions of Athens and Sparta, but its main purpose is to explore the history and organization of the thousand other city states. The main part of the book is a regionally organized inventory of all identifiable poleis covering the Greek world from Spain to the Caucasus and from the Crimea to Libya. This inventory is the work of 47 specialists, and is divided into 46 chapters, each covering a region. Each chapter contains an account of the region, a list of second-order settlements, and an alphabetically ordered description of the poleis. This description covers such topics as polis status, territory, settlement pattern, urban centre, city walls and monumental architecture, population, military strength, constitution, alliance membership, colonization, coinage, and Panhellenic victors. The first part of the book is a description of the method and principles applied in the construction of the inventory and an analysis of some of the results to be obtained by a comparative study of the 1,035 poleis included in it. The ancient Greek concept of polis is distinguished from the modern term 'city state', which historians use to cover many other historic civilizations, from ancient Sumeria to the West African cultures absorbed by the nineteenth-century colonializing powers. The focus of this project is what the Greeks themselves considered a polis to be.

